23 Feb 2022

How Nanoplastics Enter the Human Body

Erica Cirino



If you regularly drink water from plastic bottles, you’re likely ingesting even more plastic than the average consumer.

plastic

We are no better protected from plasticized air outdoors than we are indoors. Minuscule plastic fibers, fragments, foam, and films are shed from plastic stuff and are perpetually floating into and free-falling down on us from the atmosphere. Rain flushes micro- and nanoplastics out of the sky back to Earth. Plastic-filled snow is accumulating in urban areas like Bremen, Germany, and remote regions like the Arctic and Swiss Alps alike.

Wind and storms carry particles shed from plastic items and debris through the air for dozens, even hundreds, of miles before depositing them back on Earth. Dongguan, China; Paris, France; London, England; and other metropolises teeming with people are enveloped in air perpetually permeated by tiny plastic particles small enough to lodge themselves in human lungs.

Urban regions are especially replete with what scientists believe could be one of the most hazardous varieties of particulate pollution: plastic fragments, metals, and other materials that have shed off synthetic tires as a result of the normal friction caused by brake pads and asphalt roads, and from enduring weather and time. Like the plastic used to manufacture consumer items and packaging, synthetic tires may contain any number of a manufacturer’s proprietary blend of poisons meant to improve a plastic product’s appearance and performance.

Tire particles from the world’s billions of cars, trucks, bikes, tractors, and other vehicles escape into air, soil, and water bodies. Scientists are just beginning to understand the grave danger: In 2020, Washington State researchers determined that the presence of 6PPD-quinone, a byproduct of rubber-stabilizing chemical 6PPD, is playing a major factor in a mysterious long-term die-off of coho salmon in the U.S. Pacific Northwest. When Washington’s fall rains herald spawning salmon’s return from sea to stream, the precipitation also washes car tire fragments and other plastic particles into these freshwater ecosystems. In recent years, up to 90 percent of all salmon returning to spawn in this region have died—a number much greater than is considered natural, according to local researchers from the University of Washington, Tacoma. As University of Washington environmental chemist Zhenyu Tian explained in an interview with Oregon Public Broadcasting, 6PPD-quinone appears to be a key culprit: “You put this chemical, this transformation product, into a fish tank, and coho die… really fast.”

While other researchers have previously searched for, and detected, microplastic dispersed in indoor and outdoor air, a study by Alvise Vianello, an Italian scientist and professor at Aalborg University in Denmark, was the first to do so using a mannequin emulating human breathing via mechanical lung. Despite the evidence his research provides—that plastic is getting inside of human bodies and could be harming us—modern health researchers have yet to systematically search for it in people and comprehensively study how having plastic particles around us and in us at all times might be affecting human health.

Vianello and Jes Vollertsen, a professor of environmental studies at Aalborg University, explained that they’ve brought their findings to researchers at their university’s hospital for future collaborative research, perhaps searching for plastic inside human cadavers. “We now have enough evidence that we should start looking for microplastic inside human airways,” Vollertsen said. “Until then, it’s unclear whether or not we should be worried that we are breathing in plastic.”

He speculated that some of the microplastic we breathe in could be expelled when we exhale. Yet even if that’s true, our lungs may hold onto much of the plastic that enters, resulting in damage.

Other researchers, like Joana Correia Prata, a PhD student at the University of Aveiro in Portugal, have highlighted the need for systematic research on the human health effects of breathing in microplastic. “Microplastic particles and fibers, depending on their density, size, and shape, can reach the deep lung causing chronic inflammation,” she said. People working in environments with high levels of airborne microplastics, such as those employed in the textile industry, often suffer respiratory problems, Prata has noted. The perpetual presence of a comparatively lower amount of microplastics in our homes has not yet been linked to specific ailments.

While they’ve dissected the bodies of countless nonhuman animals for decades, it’s only been a few years since scientists began exploring human tissues for signs of nano- and microplastic. This, despite strong evidence suggesting plastic particles—and the toxins that adhere to them—permeate our environment and are widespread in our diets. In the past decade, scientists have detected microplastic in the bodies of fish and shellfish; in packaged meats, processed foods, beer, sea salt, soft drinks, tap water, and bottled water. There are tiny plastic particles embedded in conventionally grown fruits and vegetables sold in supermarkets and food stalls.

As the world rapidly ramped up its production of plastic in the 1950s and ’60s, two other booms occurred simultaneously: that of the world’s human population and the continued development of industrial agriculture. The latter would feed the former and was made possible thanks to the development of petrochemical-based plastics, fertilizers, and pesticides. By the late 1950s, farmers struggling to keep up with feeding the world’s growing population welcomed new research papers and bulletins published by agricultural scientists extolling the benefits of using plastic, specifically dark-colored, low-density polyethylene sheets, to boost yields of growing crops. Scientists laid out step-by-step instructions on how the plastic sheets should be rolled out over crops to retain water, reducing the need for irrigation, and to control weeds and insects, which couldn’t as easily penetrate plastic-wrapped soil.

This “plasticulture” has become a standard farming practice, transforming the soils humans have long sown from something familiar to something unknown. Crops grown with plastic seem to offer higher yields in the short term, while in the long term, use of plastic in agriculture could create toxic soils that repel water instead of absorbing it, a potentially catastrophic problem. This causes soil erosion and dust—the dissolution of ancient symbiotic relationships between soil microbes, insects, and fungi that help keep plants alive.

From the polluted soils we’ve created, plants pull in tiny nanoplastic particles through their roots along with the water they need to survive, with serious consequences: An accumulation of nanoplastic particles in a plant’s roots diminishes its ability to absorb water, impairing growth and development. Scientists have also found early evidence that nanoplastic may alter a plant’s genetic makeup in a manner increasing its susceptibility to disease.

Based on the levels of micro- and nanoplastics detected in human diets, it’s estimated that most people unwittingly ingest anywhere from 39,000 to 52,000 bits of microplastic in their diets each year. That number increases by 90,000 microplastic particles for people who regularly consume bottled water, and by 4,000 particles for those who drink water from municipal taps.

In 2018, scientists in Austria detected microplastic in human stool samples collected from eight volunteers from eight different countries across Europe and Asia. Clearly, microplastic is getting into us, with at least some of it escaping through our digestive tracts. We seem to be drinking, eating, and breathing it in.

UK announces sanctions on Russian banks and oligarchs, as armed forces prepare anti-Russian provocations

Robert Stevens


Britain has stepped up its warmongering against Russia, with Prime Minister Boris Johnson announcing sanctions against five banks and three oligarchs close to President Putin.

Johnson’s statement was heralded by cabinet minister Sajid Javid declaring that Putin’s decision to recognise the separatist republics of Donetsk and Lugansk constituted an invasion. He told Sky News, “We have seen that he has recognised these breakaway eastern regions in Ukraine and from the reports we can already tell that he has sent in tanks and troops… From that you can conclude that the invasion of Ukraine has begun.”

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson is briefed by the Chief of the Defence Staff Admiral Sir Tony Radakin at the Ministry of Defence on the situation in Ukraine. 22/02/2022. (Picture by Andrew Parsons/No 10 Downing Street/Flickr)

Johnson announced sanctions against Rossiya, IS Bank, General Bank, Promsvyazbank and the Black Sea Bank, along with Gennady Timchenko, Boris Rotenberg, and Igor Rotenberg. “This the first tranche, the first barrage of what we are prepared to do and we hold further sanctions at readiness to be deployed.”

Such is the war fever in ruling circles in the general rush to position Britain as the attack dog of US imperialism against Russia that Johnson was met with a hostile barrage from MPs from all parties who denounced the sanctions as hopelessly inadequate. The most hawkish MPs in his own Conservative Party, with close connections to the military, were vociferous in their anti-Russian demands. Even before the debate in parliament Tom Tugendhat, Conservative chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee, told the BBC, “I’d like to see this go much further, much faster. As my former boss, the chief of the defence staff, Gen Lord Richards, put it: clout, don’t dribble.”

Even so, the opposition Labour Party outdid any Tory in bloodcurdling rhetoric. Party leader Sir Keir Starmer said, “a threshold has already been breached” as Ukraine “has been invaded in a war of aggression… if we do not respond with the full set of sanctions now Putin will once again take away the message that the benefits of aggression outweigh the costs”.

Labour would work with Johnson and NATO allies “to ensure that more sanctions are introduced”. He demanded, “Russia should be excluded from financial mechanisms like Swift and we should ban trading in Russian sovereign debt” and that “Russia Today should be prevented from broadcasting its propaganda around the world”.

Labour MP Chris Bryant’s pro-imperialist credentials include refusing to serve in 2015 as shadow defence minister under former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn as he could not get a commitment that he would authorise a nuclear attack on Russia. Yesterday he called for the sanctioning of Russian owner of London-based Chelsea Football Club, Roman Abramovich. “Everybody in this house will work closely with the government to deliver far more effective and secure sanctions if the prime minister asks but they have to be now. We have to close the dirty Russian money down.”

Another Labour MP, Liam Byrne, declared, “We are here today because our strategy of deterrence has failed… The risk is that today’s slap on the wrist will not deter anything further. It’s been 2014 since we proposed sanctions for economic crimes, apart from the Magnitsky sanctions. The sanctions against the oligarchs have been on the American list since 2018… The prime minister has got to recognise that pulling our punches does not work with President Putin. We need to punch harder and if we’re not prepared to send bombers we should at least take on the bankers.”

Such was the anti-Russian fervour from the Labourites that Johnson felt able to declare his opposition to “casual Russophobia”!

Johnson defended his militarist agenda by encouraging and taking his own swipes at Germany, France and other European Union member states he described as taking a back seat in opposing Russia. “I do think it’s been right for us to be out in front in offering military assistance, defensive military assistance to the Ukrainians.”

Stung by criticism, a statement by Foreign Secretary Liz Truss announced following Johnson’s speech, “The UK will also sanction those members of the Russian Duma and Federation Council who voted to recognise the independence of Donetsk and Luhansk in flagrant violation of Ukraine’s territorial sovereignty.” She added, “And we are prepared to go much further if Russia does not pull back from the brink. We will curtail the ability of the Russian state and Russian companies to raise funds in our markets, prohibit a range of high-tech exports, and further isolate Russian banks from the global economy.”

Britain is being dragged by the Tories and Labour into the vortex of a military conflict with Russia. Cited in the Financial Times, Tom Keatinge, of the Royal United Services Institute think-tank, declared bluntly, “All the talk on sanctions so far has meant to be a deterrent and we have turned up to a gunfight with a peashooter.”

Such statements are meant to ensure that there is no let-up in Britain’s military escalation in Eastern Europe and Ukraine. Britain’s preparations for war were accelerated Monday at the conclusion of a belligerent summit of the defence ministers making up the UK-led Joint Expeditionary Force (JEF) of Northern European countries. The ministers declared after meeting at Belvoir Castle, England that they were “united in our condemnation of that unjustified act, the build-up of Russian forces on the border with Ukraine, and further incursion in the Donbas region.

UK Defence Secretary Ben Wallace (centre) meeting with Joint Expeditionary Force defence ministers in Belvoir Castle on Tuesday (source: Ministry of Defence/Twitter)

“We strongly support the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Ukraine and reiterate the right of all sovereign nations to choose their own path, their own security arrangements and their own alliances, free from external aggression and coercion, as a fundamental principle of the European security order.”

After Britain declared just days ago that Russia planned to invade Ukraine from Belarus, where Moscow has just conducted joint military training exercises, the JEF statement said, “We condemn the instrumentalization of migration flows and other hybrid activity towards Latvia, Lithuania and Poland by the Belarussian regime.”

The JEF was established in 2014 at the initiative of Prime Minister David Cameron’s Tory government and the United States/NATO. It comprises ten “High North, North Atlantic and Baltic Sea” nations: the UK, Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Latvia, Lithuania, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden. The countries involved share over 2,300 km of borders with Russia. Included in its military forces are personnel and equipment from the UK’s Royal Navy, Royal Marines, Army and Royal Air Force. Becoming fully operational in 2018, JEF command and control is located at the Standing Joint Force Headquarters in Northwood, England.

The importance of the JEF for US and British imperialism as a Europe-faced military force operating outside the orbit of the European Union was summed up by the Washington think tank, the Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS). It noted last October, “The integration of the JEF Baltic Protector maritime task force into the U.S.-led BALTOPS 2019 exercise—an annual NATO-led exercise running since 1972—shows the potential utility of JEF in a nutshell: independent and flexible, but NATO-capable and scalable. As one Royal Navy commodore puts it, the JEF is a ‘force of friends, filling a hole in the security architecture of northern Europe between a national force and a NATO force.”

General David Richards, hailed Tuesday by the warmonger Tugenhadt, played a major role in establishing the JEF. He echoed the CSIS in a 2012 speech saying of the then proposed force, “With the capability to ‘punch’ hard and not be a logistical or tactical drag on a coalition, we will be especially welcomed by our friends and feared by our enemies.”

The defence ministers’ statement emphasised, “The JEF is designed from first principles to be complementary to NATO’s Deterrence and Defence posture.” That the JEF also includes two non-NATO members, Finland and Sweden, blows out of the water the lies of the US and its allies that the incorporation of Ukraine into NATO is a distant prospect, which Moscow is exaggerating in order to excuse its own aggression. The JEF’s military architecture already exists for Ukraine to be fully integrated into anti-Russia operations well before it is granted NATO membership.

As an “agile, capable, and ready force”, the JEF statement announced it “today agreed to undertake a series of integrated military activities across our part of northern Europe—at sea, on land and in the air.” What are planned are a series of provocative actions on Russia’s doorstep. The JEF concluded, “For example, we will shortly conduct an exercise demonstrating JEF nations’ freedom of movement in the Baltic Sea.”

Bolsonaro’s Russia trip highlights rising geopolitical tensions in South America

Miguel Andrade


Brazil’s fascistic President Jair Bolsonaro concluded a three-day trip to Russia and Hungary last Friday in the face of virtually unanimous condemnation from the corporate media and major political forces in Brazil. The trip was attacked for undermining Brazilian relations with the imperialist powers, as they engage in hysterical accusations against the Russian government aimed at provoking a war in Ukraine.

Jair Bolsonaro and Vladimir Putin meet in Moscow on February 16, 2022 (credit: Alan Santos/PR)

In his meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin, Bolsonaro declared Brazil to be “in solidarity” with Russia. The declaration drew immediate criticism from White House press secretary Jen Psaki, who said Brazil “appeared to be on the opposite side of the global community.” On the following day, Bolsonaro met Hungary’s far-right leader Viktor Orbán, declaring their common values as “God, fatherland, family and liberty” – an open celebration of their shared fascistic orientation.

Bolsonaro’s visit had been agreed on in December and was announced as focusing on unspecified military cooperation agreements, bilateral trade and investments and, in particular, reassurances on Russia’s supply of fertilizers to Brazil’s crucial agribusiness sector. Grain and meat production has been virtually the only sectors of the Brazilian economy to experience any economic growth in the last ten years, and are seen as responsible for avoiding an even sharper GDP downturn since 2015.

The corporate press, fully aligned with the US political establishment and especially the Democratic Party, attempted to minimize the objective contradictions driving the trip. The assessment by major newspapers ranged from portraying it exclusively as an attempt to “provoke” US President Joe Biden to the absurd claim that it was driven by Putin’s and Bolsonaro’s shared “male chauvinism.” Significantly, pundits were keen to minimize the commercial relations between Brazil and Russia. A typical assessment widely shared in the press came in the ultra-right Veja magazine, which wrote “Bolsonaro prefers to upset the US, the world’s largest economy, by visiting an economic partner of little importance.”

The fact remains that Brazil imports 90 percent of its fertilizers, and Russia is responsible for a quarter of that. Crippling sanctions imposed on Belarus, another key fertilizer supplier, coupled with pandemic shortages and export restrictions in China and India have made fertilizer prices shoot up 300 percent in 2021. Already hit by a massive drought driven by global warming, Brazilian meat and grain industries are facing a perfect storm, and Brazil’s agriculture minister was forced to travel to Russia in December 2021 to seek more supplies.

As Bolsonaro’s travel date approached, the US-led war threats intensified, and Bolsonaro’s arrival date, February 16, was even declared by the White House as the day for a Russian invasion. Editorials in Brazil begged Bolsonaro to delay the trip, warning that it would undermine stated goals of his administration – deepening ties with NATO and entering the OECD. Foreign Relations Ministry officials reportedly insisted that Bolsonaro delay the trip or at least include a stop in Ukraine in order to show “neutrality,” which Bolsonaro rejected. Reports also multiplied citing US concerns over the trip.

The media furor did little to illuminate the real tensions underlying Bolsonaro’s defiance of both US imperialism and the apparent consensus within Brazil’s political establishment. The Brazilian statement after the meeting emphasized Brazil’s “historic independence in military technology” and how “Russia has always been a technological reference, especially in nuclear issues.” Such declarations have ominous implications.

There is no doubt that Bolsonaro’s Russian trip amid the US warmongering expresses deep divisions and concerns within the Brazilian ruling class and across South America. The incapacity of the corporate press to discuss those objective tensions, focusing instead on a personalistic narrative is in itself an expression of extreme nervousness and disorientation. As the semi-official narrative goes, with the mindless Bolsonaro gone after the October elections, Brazil will return to a democratic, peace-loving and fraternal relationship with the world and a whirlwind of foreign investment will ensue.

Reality couldn’t be further from this daydream, as international tensions reach a boiling point. Bolsonaro’s trip to Russia amid the frenzied US war drive goes well beyond the considerable degree of ambiguity that has marked Brazilian foreign and military policy after World War II, despite its general alignment with the US against the Soviet Union and both countries’ joint anti-communist military actions across the continent.

At the root of these conflicts is the historical decline of US imperialism, which is growing increasingly aggressive as it attempts to offset its diminishing economic power with military force.

Bolsonaro’s Russian trip follows what had been a series of breakthroughs in US-Brazilian relations during his term, with unprecedented joint military drills involving US forces on Brazilian territory, the promotion of the country as a “NATO special partner” and growing collaboration with the US in space technology.

Those early developments in Bolsonaro’s presidency marked a reversal of a historic reluctance of the Brazilian military to offer unconditional cooperation with the Pentagon. On the key issue of military and nuclear industries, the Brazilian military has historically sought to preserve room to maneuver against US and even UN pressure. Famously, senior Brazilian military figures have cited the national nuclear industry, and especially the capacity to mine and enrich uranium for its two power plants outside Rio de Janeiro, as a military deterrent, preserving the capacity to develop a nuclear arsenal. Brazil has never let the UN fully inspect its nuclear infrastructure.

Under the PT’s President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the military chose the Swedish Gripen fighter jets on the explicit basis that they would allow independence from NATO technology. The PT relentlessly boasts of signing a deal with France making Brazil the only non-nuclear country able to build and operate a nuclear-powered submarine – the AUKUS pact has finally given Australia the same capacity.

The PT always sought to cast its massive rearmament program in the language of “multilateralism,” that is, of an armed deterrent, or an “armed peace.” Defying this bankrupt nationalist logic, the Brazilian military crowned the PT rearmament program with the first National Defense Strategy white paper of the Bolsonaro presidency, which declared for the first time “inter-state” conflicts, and not guerrilla warfare or “drug dealing,” as the main concern for South American security and the chief strategic concern of the Brazilian armed forces.

That designation followed closely the 2017 US strategic shift from the “war on terror” to “great power conflicts,” which has included the Pentagon’s commitment to countering Chinese and Russian influence in Latin America.

Tensions have escalated on the continent. Bolsonaro took office amid the frenzied US offensive to overthrow Venezuela’s Nicolas Maduro. At the time, the Brazilian press was filled with concerns that the country’s armed forces were falling behind NATO-armed Colombia, and could not engage Venezuela’s Russian-supplied fighter jets during or in the fallout from US regime-change attempts.

The intensification of cooperation with Russia on key issues in defiance of US foreign policy and amid the hysteria over Ukraine flows directly from an assessment that unconditional alignment with a United States that is suffering declining global hegemony doesn’t offer sufficient guarantees for the interests of Brazilian capitalism.

Such an assessment extends far beyond Brazil, with Argentine President Alberto Fernández— Bolsonaro’s nominal “left” rival—making his own trip to Russia just days before Bolsonaro, and facing the same internal pressures in his own country.

Further north, in Colombia, the most reliable US ally in the region, such tensions are raising the specter of a coup in case the new administration to be elected in May does not continue to toe Washington’s line. In a recent trip to the country, the diplomatic engineer of the 2014 anti-Russian coup in Ukraine, under-secretary of state Victoria Nuland, charged Russia with interfering in the Colombian elections— to the benefit of the front-runner, Senator Gabriel Petro.

Latin American nations, having lived the entire 20th century under Washington’s domination, viewed as US imperialism’s “own backyard,” will not escape imperialist war through a bankrupt “military deterrent,” or by means of maneuvering with Washington’s Russian, Chinese or European rivals.

Twice in the twentieth century, Brazil was drawn into world wars on the side of the US and Britain. In 1942, in declaring war on the Axis, Brazilian corporatist dictator Getúlio Vargas not only sent 25,000 troops to Italy, but was also forced to cede control of the country’s northeast as a platform for US aviation to attack Axis forces in western Africa. Vargas reached a deal with the US in the face of threats that the Germans themselves would assault the region and use it for the same purposes.

Needless to say, the spiraling international conflicts of the 21st century would immediately bring Brazilian infrastructure under an even more direct threat. Brazil’s grain and meat terminals loading Chinese cargo ships would be only the first target. Attacks on Argentina would cripple Brazil, given the two country’s economic integration, and the opposite would be no less true.

There is not a single political force in any South American country remotely willing to tell the public the truth about this reality, let alone able to act on it. In Brazil, Lula and the PT leadership were thrown into disarray by Bolsonaro’s trip. Having concentrated its entire opposition to Bolsonaro on foreign policy issues and the need to be more assertive in seeking concessions from the US, the PT has been bitterly split and disoriented by the trip.

Lula’s former Foreign Relations minister Celso Amorim openly complimented Bolsonaro for defying the US. On the other hand, the party’s 2018 presidential candidate, Fernando Haddad, a hero of identity politics purveyors in the country, fully aligned himself with US imperialism, declaring that Bolsonaro went to Moscow to learn how to improve his “fake news” operations in Brazil – thus lending credibility to the entire anti-Russian hysteria in the press.

Haddad meant his reactionary pro-imperialist tirade as a condemnation of Bolsonaro’s threats to the October elections, exposing that the PT itself has nothing more than an appeal for imperialist backing, in the form of “Russian interference” charges, to counter a Bolsonaro coup.

European Union refuses vaccine patent waiver but agrees mRNA transfer technology scheme as a sop to Africa

Jean Shaoul


The European Union (EU) has given its approval to the World Health Organization (WHO)’s scheme to enable six African countries, Egypt, Kenya, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa and Tunisia, to access the technology needed to produce mRNA vaccines. Africa has thus far been almost entirely reliant on imported COVID-19 vaccines.

The decision comes after Pfizer/BioNTech and Moderna, whose mRNA COVID vaccines were funded by the German and US governments, had denied a request from the WHO to share their technology and expertise. Apart from Astra-Zeneca, the major pharmaceutical corporations have refused to let other countries produce their vaccines, instead signing a few deals to allow them to bottle and package doses, citing quality concerns and the time required to get new companies up to speed.

The EU, Switzerland and the United Kingdom have refused to agree to India and South Africa’s proposal, backed by more than 100 nations, researchers, campaign groups, businesses and media outlets, that the World Trade Organization (WTO) waive intellectual-property rights for COVID-19 vaccines and treatments during the pandemic. While the US Biden administration declared it was in favour of such a waiver, this was for public relations purposes only as it has done nothing to force US companies to comply.

Rejecting a coordinated global response to the pandemic, capitalist governments globally have put profits before lives in support of their own corporations and banks’ interests, condemning the world’s poorest countries to ever greater poverty and hardship.

More than a year after vaccines became available, just 12 percent of the African population, 168 million of a 1.3 billion population, have been fully vaccinated, with 80 percent of the population yet to receive a single shot. About six million people are being vaccinated in Africa every week. This needs to increase sixfold to around 36 million if the continent is to reach the target of vaccinating 70 percent of the population of every country by the middle of 2022. So far, only Mauritius and Seychelles have met the 70 percent target.

People line up to be vaccinated against COVID-19 in Lawley, south of Johannesburg, South Africa, Wednesday, Dec. 1, 2021. (AP Photo/ Shiraaz Mohamed)

The disparity in vaccine access is obscene. While 116 countries around the world are nowhere near meeting their 70 percent target and COVAX, the WHO initiative that provides most of the vaccines for low and middle-income countries, is running out of money, 75 percent of the population in the EU and the US have been vaccinated.

At last week’s fractious meeting of the African Union and the EU in Brussels, African leaders and public health officials accused rich countries of monopolising the vast majority of the global supply of vaccines by paying far more than poorer countries could ever afford, hoarding doses and donating vaccines close to their expiry date, making “a mockery of vaccine equity” Although several African countries have the know-how and facilities to manufacture vaccines, vaccine nationalism and profit gouging have left the continent 99 percent dependent on imports—to the extent that any doses are available for purchase—and donations.

The purpose of the WHO’s technology transfer project, launched last June in Cape Town, is to enable poorer countries to access the mRNA technology, which works by delivering genetic molecules containing the code for key parts of a pathogen into human cells, thereby provoking an immune response. This would supposedly enable their mass production of mRNA vaccines and end their reliance on Big Pharma’s profit-maximising schemes. More than 70 percent of mRNA shots from Moderna and Pfizer/BioNTech have gone to rich countries.

As WHO chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said during the launch ceremony hosted by the European Council, France, South Africa and the WHO, “No other event like the COVID-19 pandemic has shown that reliance on a few companies to supply global public goods is limiting, and dangerous.”

Although the mRNA technology transfer hub has been set up to manufacture COVID-19 vaccines, it will have the potential to produce other vaccines and products, including insulin to treat diabetes, cancer medicines and, potentially, vaccines for diseases such as malaria, tuberculosis and HIV. Nevertheless, while training is set to begin next month, this is unlikely to have a major impact for quite some time.

The announcement comes days after Afrigen, a South African company that is part of the WHO’s mRNA hub, revealed it had developed, in collaboration with Johannesburg’s University of the Witwatersrand, its own version of an mRNA vaccine based on publicly available data for the Moderna vaccine. Their success exposes the self-serving claims of Pfizer, BioNTech and Moderna that Africa lacked the necessary expertise to manufacture their vaccines.

Afrigen plans to scale up production towards commercial scale and set up clinical trials later this year. It chose the Moderna vaccine because much of its sequencing is in the public domain—the cost of its research and clinical trials were largely financed by $2.5 billion of funding from the US government—and because the company has pledged not to enforce patents during the pandemic. Although, with most of the advanced countries declaring the pandemic over, that may not have much longevity.

South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa called on the global vaccine distribution scheme COVAX and vaccines alliance Gavi to commit to buying vaccines from local manufacturing hubs.

The EU is anxious for its own geostrategic reasons to be seen to be supporting Africa’s vaccination programme at a time when its relations with Africa are strained.

France has announced it will pull its troops out of Mali in the face of huge popular opposition to French imperialism after Bamako’s military government hired Russian mercenaries and expelled the French ambassador. The military in Mali, Burkina Faso and Guinea have toppled French-aligned governments as ISIS-aligned and other jihadist groups have gained ground across the Sahel and central Africa.

Furthermore, African leaders view Europe’s green agenda as a means of blocking potentially lucrative oil and gas projects billed as bringing electricity to 600 million Africans.

The EU’s move comes at a time of growing competition for influence in Africa. Trade with China has risen over the last 20 years to reach $176 billion in 2020, while trade between the EU and Africa has stagnated at around €225 billion.

Last November, Chinese President Xi Jinping announced at the Forum on China-Africa Cooperation summit that Beijing would commit an additional 1 billion vaccines to Africa in 2022—more than the EU’s global vaccine-sharing commitment. China, he said, would also share 25 percent of its allocation of International Monetary Fund special drawing rights (SDRs) with Africa after Senegalese President Macky Sall made a request just days earlier. European leaders called last May for countries to redirect $100 billion in SDRs to Africa but have so far delivered little.

The EU signed off on the WHO’s technology transfer hub scheme as a cheap compromise at the EU-AU summit in Brussels, with the European Commission, Germany, France and Belgium agreeing to cough up a miserly €40 million for the technology hub to allow African countries to increase their manufacturing capacity and eventually produce mRNA jabs on a commercial scale.

The EU also pledged to continue donating vaccines to Africa—at a snail’s pace. Having thus far delivered just 148 million doses, 22 percent of the doses it pledged to vulnerable countries, the bloc intends to reach 450 million by the summer, still less than the 750 million pledged.

At the same time, BioNTech announced plans to deliver factory facilities built out of shipping containers to several African countries to enable the production of the Pfizer vaccine on the continent. While this may eventually make it easier for African countries to obtain the Pfizer vaccine, BioNTech will not be sharing its technological knowhow. The company has also signed a fill and finish deal—the final stages of production, with the drug itself coming from Europe—with Biovac. It has announced it will build manufacturing plants in Rwanda and Senegal.

Similarly, Moderna, under pressure to produce vaccines in lower-income countries, has announced plans to spend $500 million building mRNA vaccine factories in Africa, but few details are available.

French President Emmanuel Macron said that supporting African health sovereignty was one of the key goals of starting up local production, “to empower regions and countries to fend for themselves, during crises, and in peacetime.”

Be that as it may, there is no intention for that goal to be realized any time soon, as European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen admitted. “Today, of all the vaccines administered in Africa, one percent is produced in Africa—of all the vaccines. And rightly so, the goal is in 2040 to have reached a level of 60 percent of vaccines produced in Africa, that are administered in Africa [emphasis added].”

Omicron is proving to be deadly serious for children in the US

Benjamin Mateus


The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) reported that an additional 175,000 children were infected with SARS-CoV-2 for the week ending February 17. Despite the declines being celebrated by the media, this figure remains above even the peaks reached during Delta. Additionally, weekly childhood cases have exceeded 100,000 for 28 weeks in a row.

According to the AAP’s tracker, 871 children have died thus far in the pandemic, with 20 more children in the last week and more than 82 in one month. Since the Omicron surge commenced in early December, 220 children have died, accounting for one-quarter of all child deaths, making clear that Omicron is not mild for children or adults.

Child with COVID-19 in hospital bed (Medical University of South Carolina)

In all, more than 12.5 million children in the United States have tested positive for COVID-19, representing 20 percent of all children. Of these infections, 7.5 million (60 percent) have been added to the ledger since the first week of September 2021, coinciding with efforts by states and the Biden administration to open all schools to in-person instruction. During the Omicron surge, 4.6 million children were infected with COVID, and of these, 1.9 million were added in just the last four weeks.

This surge of infections underscores the indisputable fact that schools are and remain essential sites for pediatric infections and community transmission. Worrisome is that all efforts to permanently dispense with any meaningful mitigation measure during the current downswing in cases will fuel yet another surge, driven by the BA.2 sub-variant of Omicron, which is accelerating across the country.

This sub-variant currently accounts for almost four percent of all infections nationally. And recent evidence notes that it can spread more quickly than the BA.1 sub-variant. It also appears to evade immunity from prior infections and vaccinations better. Perhaps most concerning, it also seems more virulent, attacking the lungs more efficiently in animal models than BA.1.

These findings indicated that children, who remain the least vaccinated, will continue to be significantly affected by COVID. Adding to parents’ worries, Pfizer has postponed its rolling application to the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to include the two-dose regimen for children aged six months to four years because it did not appear to generate a strong enough immune response.

The pharmaceutical giant has been saying that children may need three doses of the pediatric version of the vaccine (three micro-grams), which only has one-tenth of the dose of the adult vaccines. There are calls by parents and advocacy groups for off-label use, which the AAP has previously advised against, until the evidence for their recommendation can be assured.

The bad news on vaccines has been compounded by recent findings that an Omicron-specific booster does not confer an advantage over the conventional third dose of the vaccines. David Montefiori, director of the Laboratory for AIDS Vaccines Research and Development at Duke University Medical Center in North Carolina, who has been studying the COVID vaccines, told Nature, “What we’re seeing coming out of these preclinical studies in animal models is that a boost with a variant vaccine doesn’t really do any better than a boost with the current vaccines.”

More studies will be forthcoming but the current deadly stage of the pandemic has already exposed the extreme limitations of a vaccine-only strategy for a pathogen that has mutated to such an extent that it has developed immune evasion properties to escape any pharmacological offensives against it, including vaccines explicitly designed against it.

More pressing, however, in the context of the decision of governments at every level to surrender to the spread of the BA.2 sub-variant, is how children will fare.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s (CDC) tracker, 434 children under five, 288 children between five and 11, 316 children between 12 and 15, and 308 children between 16 and 18 have died during the pandemic. In total, there have been 1,346 COVID-related deaths, while only five have been reported killed from the flu in the same period. Worse, those under five account for almost one-third of all COVID deaths.

Figure 1 - Pediatric COVID deaths

In a recent Tweet, health care expert Gregory Travis published a graph showing that more than half of the childhood COVID-related deaths occurred since November, a span of four months. In the graph, the “orange” line demonstrates the sudden steep rise in deaths due to the deadly Delta and Omicron waves ignited by school reopenings. In this regard, the teachers’ unions bear a significant responsibility, having enforcing a return to in-person learning in the midst of a pandemic.

Travis bluntly stated, “we are currently in a wave of pediatric death, unlike anything we’ve seen so far in the pandemic. It is largely invisible because most people and the media only pay attention to the lagging indicators, which have not caught up with the wave of child deaths that began in November.”

The CDC’s data is far more comprehensive than the AAP’s, but the agency and the mainstream press hardly ever mention these findings. In particular, the CDC leadership has played a criminal role in suppressing the publication of vital data, to the population’s detriment.

Beyond the more immediate concerns from acute infections and deaths that have affected children, a far more sinister aspect of COVID relates to the impact these infections will have on their health over their lives. One of the oft-repeated but objectively unverified claims, that children are immune to COVID, is being proven wrong.

A recent study released in preprint form from the prestigious Friedrich Alexander University Erlangen-Nürnberg in Germany attempted to answer one such question. The authors wanted to determine “the frequency and extent of persistent sequelae in children and adolescents after infection with SARS-CoV-2” in their lungs. Previous studies in adults had shown that even three months after the acute phase of their infection, blood vessel injury to the lung’s microvasculature was evident in over 65 percent of patients.

Using low-field magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), which avoids the non-ionizing radiation from conventional computed tomographic imaging (CT), the authors compared children and adolescents with previously PCR-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection to controls. The two groups were well matched. Among those with previous COVID infection, 25 patients (46 percent) were diagnosed with Long COVID.

The comparative imaging demonstrated an increase in ventilation and perfusion defects in the lung tissue among those with prior infection. The study found that unaffected lung parenchyma was reduced from 81.2 percent in healthy volunteers to 60.8 percent in post-COVID patients.

The authors wrote, “In contrast to the consensus to date, assuming less severe COVID-19 infections and sequelae in younger patients, our study demonstrates widespread functional lung alterations are present in children and adolescents. This expands the understanding of pediatric post-acute COVID-19 disease, with the relevance of our findings even increasing as SARS-CoV-2 incidence is rising in most countries.”

The level of dysfunction the authors found was unexpected and underscores the dangers posed by public health leaders such as Dr. Anthony Fauci and figures like Bill Gates who have essentially called infection with the Omicron variant a “natural” vaccine because the disease is supposedly mild and could help the world reach herd immunity faster than the burdensome process of inoculating almost eight billion people across the globe three times if the booster is deemed essential to ensuring a person is “fully vaccinated.”

Indeed, the call to abandon all mitigation measures will have untold consequences for those fortunate to survive their repeated acute infections, regardless of their vaccination status.

Little is known about the impact COVID will have on the lives of billions of people, from immune dysregulation to opportune immune-related diseases, vascular and cardiac dysfunctions, chronic lung problems, kidney disorders and more.

However, the impact of the pandemic and mass infection on children is only now being ascertained. The results of these studies suggest that COVID infections may have life-long consequences for these innocents, underscoring the criminal nature of the “live with the virus” strategy being enforced by governments around the world.

COVID deaths and hospital admissions on the rise in Germany

Tamino Dreisam


While the federal and state governments claim there is a “break in the Omicron wave” and continue to ease protective measures, hospitalisations and deaths are on the rise in Germany. On Friday alone, more than 220,000 people became infected. The 7-day incidence rate remains huge, at 1,347 per 100,000 inhabitants. Some 329 out of 411 districts have an incidence rate of over 1,000; 52 districts have a rate of over 2,000 and the Regen district even has an incidence level of over 3,000.

The adjusted hospitalisation rate is around 12 (per 100,000), and has recently risen again. On Friday alone, 1,836 people had to be hospitalised and 243 were transferred to intensive care. The number of coronavirus patients receiving intensive care also rose again recently and now stands at 2,466. The proportion of vacant intensive care beds is at 10 percent, which is the national average and is considered the limit of hospital response capacity.

Data show a significant increase in physician visits for acute respiratory illnesses with a COVID-19 diagnosis in all age groups since the turn of the year. The values clearly exceed the level of the preceding waves. The number of active outbreaks in medical treatment facilities last week was 175, with at least 1,253 new infections.

Commuters at the public transport station Brandenburger Tor in central Berlin, Germany, Friday, Nov. 12, 2021. (AP Photo/Markus Schreiber)

A key driver of the pandemic remains schools and kindergartens. In both cases, the number of outbreaks has increased rapidly since the beginning of the year. In mid-January, there were even about twice as many kindergarten outbreaks reported per week as in the peak phases of the third and fourth waves. For the last four weeks, a total of 1,201 outbreaks have been reported so far. However, due to late reporting, the actual number is even higher.

At schools, the number of outbreaks is about six times higher than the same time a year ago. In the last four weeks, 2,013 outbreaks have been reported. Again, the actual number is even higher due to late reporting and the scaling back of PCR testing in schools.

The number of deaths is particularly alarming. Since last year’s federal election, more than 25,000 people have died from the virus. In particular, the death toll among children and young people is higher than ever before in the pandemic. Since last October alone, at least one child has died from COVID-19 every week on average. However, the actual number could be even higher, as the Robert Koch Institute does not provide an exact figure per week in this age group for reasons of data protection.

Despite these figures, Federal Health Minister Karl Lauterbach (Social Democratic Party, SPD) declared at a press conference on Friday that the peak of the Omicron wave had passed and that the pandemic had been weathered well: “So far, we have managed the Omicron wave and also the Delta wave reasonably well. We have managed to protect the large number of unvaccinated among the elderly and avert a significant increase in deaths. We have the opportunity to come into Spring with a good overall record.”

Statements like these underline the criminality of the ruling class. More than 120,000 coronavirus deaths in Germany alone are considered a “good overall record.” The claim that the elderly population has been protected is also an outright lie. Last week alone, there were 414 active outbreaks in old people’s and nursing homes—41 more than in the previous week. This resulted in 5,226 new infections.

The number of deaths in Germany is high. At the Federal Press Conference, Professor Michael Meyer-Hermann, head of the Department of Systems Immunology at the Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research, explained: “We have 1,400 deaths per million people, which is a frighteningly high number, I think. ... If you look at South Korea, it is only 140. So, you have countries that have managed better, and those are mostly the countries that have pursued a low-incidence strategy.”

The comparison with China is even clearer: the country with a population of 1.4 billion was able to limit the number of deaths to under 4,700 thanks to its Zero-Covid strategy. That would correspond to four deaths per million people.

At the press conference, Meyer-Hermann also addressed the great danger of long-term consequences of a coronavirus infection: “There are a large number of people who suffer long-term if they have a COVID infection and this is not only an economic problem, but also a psychological and mental problem in society. Just yesterday, there was a large-scale study in America showing that people who had a COVID infection have massively higher secondary consequences of a long-term nature. Periods of one year were examined.”

Despite the disastrous consequences of its coronavirus policy, the German government is not willing to change it, but on the contrary plans to perpetuate it for years to come. Thus, Lauterbach outlined a perspective for next autumn which could “in the best case,” assume that an Omicron variant will come again. “But it can also happen again that variants arise that penetrate deeper into the tissue than is the case with Omicron and then we would have a much more dangerous situation.”

The herd immunity policy now being implemented by almost every government in the world is not leading to an “endemic” or milder version of the virus. On the contrary, more infectious and vaccine-resistant mutations are forming. Just a few months after the emergence of the Omicron strain, the even more infectious Omicron sub-variant BA.2 is now spreading and is responsible for 15 percent of all infections in Germany.

The lifting of the last protective measures is meeting with widespread rejection. According to a recent poll by the Insa opinion research institute for Bild am Sonntag, a majority are in favour of keeping the mask requirement after 20 March. Even if it were to be abolished anyway, a majority still wanted to wear a mask for protection. Recent protests by schoolchildren against the spread of infections in schools have also met with widespread support.

COVID surge accelerates in New Zealand

Tom Peters


New Zealand’s COVID-19 surge continues, with case numbers rising sharply every day, placing immense pressure on the rundown healthcare system. Daily reported infections have nearly tripled in the past week, from 1,160 on February 16 to 3,297 today.

The total number of active cases in the community is at least 21,648. There are 179 people with COVID in hospital. Three deaths have been recorded so far this week, bringing the total for the pandemic to 56.

The Labour Party-led government repeatedly refers to the fact that deaths are among the lowest in the world. However, the government abandoned the elimination strategy which kept COVID out of the country for most of the past two years in October. Since then, businesses and schools have been reopened, allowing the Delta and Omicron variants to spread.

Waitakere Hospital (Google Streetview)

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern told a press conference on Monday that “very soon we will all know people who have COVID, or we will potentially get it ourselves.” She declared that “most people” who get sick will only have a “mild-to-moderate illness.”

In fact, while governments are rolling back public health restrictions and pretending the pandemic is over, worldwide about 60,000-70,000 people are dying from the virus every week.

Epidemiologist Rod Jackson told Radio NZ today he is concerned people are not taking Omicron seriously enough. He said it was “just not true” to call it a mild disease, and pointed out that in the US “more people have died from Omicron than died from Delta”—a fact that has not been widely reported.

Vaccination, while essential, is not enough to prevent significant levels of illness and death. Some 49.6 percent of COVID patients in Auckland and Northland hospitals are described as fully vaccinated.

In just the last seven days, Ireland recorded 70 COVID deaths, Singapore 46, and Denmark 232. These countries have a relatively high level of vaccination and a population similar to New Zealand.

Hundreds of NZ schools are being hit with outbreaks, despite false assurances from the government that reopening schools, with children largely unvaccinated, was safe. Yesterday, the Ministry of Education reported that at least 447 schools and early childhood education centres were managing COVID cases, up from 163 a week earlier.

Otago University and Auckland University have chosen to move courses online for the first two months of the academic year. Canterbury University and Victoria University of Wellington, however, are pushing ahead with in-person lectures.

Public hospitals, which have been starved of funds for decades, are already under tremendous pressure. All the problems that existed before COVID, including chronic understaffing and overcrowded emergency departments, have been exacerbated.

Dianne McCulloch, a nurse from Waitakere Hospital’s emergency department and a New Zealand Nurses Organisation (NZNO) delegate, told Radio NZ last night, “We are on the brink of total exhaustion.” The situation is “worsening daily,” and “we are in fear that we are not going to cope,” she said.

Yesterday, Auckland Hospital and Greenlane Hospital announced that large numbers of non-urgent surgeries would be cancelled, in order to free up resources for COVID patients.

About 10,000 allied health workers have voted to strike for two days next month, over low pay and poor conditions. The Public Service Association (PSA) members include laboratory workers who process COVID tests, and contact tracers. Due to a lack of resources, some tests are taking five days to process.

All the unions, however, including the NZNO and PSA, have enforced the Labour government’s pro-business decision to abandon elimination. None of them have called for schools and non-essential businesses to close in order to stamp out COVID, which is the only way to prevent hospitals from being overwhelmed, and to save lives.

While the unions are seeking to prevent the emergence of a working class movement fighting for a scientific and properly-resourced elimination policy, the political establishment and the media are promoting extreme right wing proponents of mass infection.

For more than two weeks, the media has focused on several hundred anti-vaccination protesters occupying the lawn outside parliament in Wellington. The protesters, following the example of the Canadian “Freedom Convoy,” have blocked streets, forcing the closure of businesses, the National Library, university buildings, and Wellington Girls College. Several of the school’s students have reportedly been harassed by the protesters.

There have been violent confrontations with police. Human faeces was reportedly flung at the cops on Monday. Yesterday, three officers were injured after protesters sprayed them with what is thought to have been acid. Three people were arrested, including one who tried to drive a car into police officers.

The protest has spread beyond Wellington. About 1,000 people, led by Destiny Church’s front group, the Freedom and Rights Coalition, marched through Christchurch on Saturday, demanding the removal of vaccine mandates and an end to the inoculation of children. A smaller encampment has been established in Picton.

The rally promoters include anti-vax conspiracy theorists, far-right bloggers, the New Conservative Party, Destiny Church, and Counterspin, a NZ-based online media platform funded by US fascist Steve Bannon.

This rabble has received non-stop media coverage and encouragement from capitalist politicians, as well as some liberal and self-styled “left” commentators. A number of well-heeled celebrities have also voiced support, including Olympic sailor Russell Coutts, former All Black Keith Robinson, TV personality Gilda Kirkpatrick and musician Jason Kerrison.

Opposition National Party leader Christopher Luxon declared on Monday: “Kiwis should be able to sympathise with some of the issues being raised by protesters on parliament’s grounds without being framed as condoning illegal behaviour, or siding with anti-science conspiracy theorists.” He demanded that the government say when it will “start reducing the rules and restrictions” and “phasing out the mandates.”

National’s ally, the right-wing ACT Party leader David Seymour, has held discussions with protest representatives. Right-wing nationalist NZ First Party leader Winston Peters yesterday visited the encampment without wearing a mask. Peters was deputy prime minister from 2017 to 2020, when NZ First was a key partner in the previous Labour-led coalition government.

NZ First Party leader Winston Peters visits the anti-vaccine mandate protesters occupying parliament grounds, February 22, 2021. (Credit: Zeb Jackson Live Facebook page)

Peters told Newstalk ZB that the protesters were “very concerned” about “the state of democracy.” He denounced Ardern and other politicians for refusing to talk to the protesters, and said darkly that “because of that sort of arrogant behaviour, things are going to get a whole lot worse.”

The government is, in fact, moving to remove remaining restrictions, starting with the border quarantine system. From the end of February, New Zealanders returning from Australia will no longer have to isolate themselves in a quarantine hotel for 10 days. On Monday, Ardern told the media that COVID-19 cases were expected to peak in mid-to-late March, after which the government would start easing mandates and vaccine pass requirements.